A Syrian government air strike northeast of Damascus killed at least 80 people in a marketplace on Sunday, rescue workers in the rebel-held area and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
At least 200 more people were wounded in the attack on Douma, about 15km northeast of Damascus, according to the British-based observatory and the local arm of Syrian Civil Defence, a rescue service operating in rebel areas.
The observatory said at least 10 rockets were fired and accused the warplanes of bombing again after rescue workers had arrived at the scene. “This is a documented massacre,” said Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the observatory.
A Syrian military source said air force strikes on Douma and nearby Harasta targeted the headquarters of the rebel group Islam Army.
The insurgent group attacked government positions in Harasta on Saturday.
A video released by Islam Army showed its leader Zahran Alloush taking part in the attack. The group is one of the most powerful insurgent factions operating near Damascus, the seat of president Bashar al-Assad’s power more than four years into the civil war that has killed a quarter of a million people.
Dozens of bodies
Another video bearing the symbol of the Syrian Civil Defence rescue service appeared to show dozens of bodies lined up on the ground.
A photo showed civil defence workers wrapping bodies in white shrouds. Another video showed rescuers carrying bodies in a street strewn with vegetables and debris.
Syrian Civil Defence published the names of 60 people so far identified as killed in the attack. “There are tens waiting to be identified,” it said on its Facebook page. – (Reuters)